Monday, October 31, 2022

New Poetry by Lynn White










Clock Wise

They were traditional
retirement gifts
after a long working life.
I never understood.
Perhaps the first time
it was given in irony,
an employer with a quirky sense of humour,
but then it caught on and became traditional.

I remember the one given to my father.
It was brown
all brown
with cream numbers and fingers.
It sat dismally on our mantelpiece
ticking away morosely
long after his death.

As I child I used
the glass as a mirror,
a smiling face, a funny face,
or a gurning face.
My faces livened it up a bit
but I left it behind
when mother died.


- © Lynn White 2022


Lynn White lives in north Wales. Her work is influenced by issues of social justice and events, places and people she has known or imagined. She is especially interested in exploring the boundaries of dream, fantasy and reality. She was shortlisted in the Theatre Cloud 'War Poetry for Today' competition and has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize, Best of the Net and a Rhysling Award. 

Monday, October 24, 2022

New Poetry by Andrew Kidd










The Ghost of Liparis Loeselii at Crymlyn Burrows

Bunting out of this purpled, boggy heath
are grasses that fence small pools
stagnating and snaking to pull in
saltwater that marsh to amass
as black-surfaced mirrors.
Inside these, the fiery, wide-lipped glow
of twayblade and tresses
ghost to illuminate this darkening sandpile,
all trodden and trampled upon
by the industrious boot that giants across the river.
Water ripples trickle out repeatedly
to sequins and glitter like eyelid-flicker
leading down to a place where meadow pipits skirt
along Brunel's old harbour wall.
Reflected in the face of the water
is an apparition in a clear-sighted clearing,
yellowed like gorse, part-illuminated
by sparks that anvil across.


- © Andrew Kidd 2022


Andrew C. Kidd has had poetry and flash fiction published in Elsewhere: A Journal of Place, Friday Flash Fiction, Journal of the American Medical Association, Green Ink Poetry and Soor Ploom Press.

Sunday, October 23, 2022

New Poetry by Lydia Pejovic










Wild horse rights advocates say:

leave the hoofprints in the dirt. If we
continue to sweep away the remnants

of what stepped here yesterday, or last
century, or tomorrow, what can we make

of walking patterns or the weather? Think
about the recent rains that washed away

red dirt and anthills. What would we do
without knowledge of a natural cleanse?

We would think that someone wiped away
the hoofprints, or worse yet, someone took

the horses and domesticated them and cut
their hooves into new shapes, so that they

could decorate the land in different, more
controlled, ways.


hit lock

he puts the car key in his mouth and hits “lock” / we’re a distance from his car but / i hear a horn down the garage / he tells me that an open mouth amplifies range / and locks the doors from afar / it’s science, baby, he says / i want to put the keys on my tongue / i want to give him the back of my throat / and let my uvula become his punching bag / the range that we could create / would be a wide wide chasm / almost as large as the space / between the past versions of us / it is selfish for him to break / the rules of distance / things shouldn’t work in certain ranges / for certain reasons, yet / he finds ways to extend himself / far and deep inside / past any existing laws or ideas / that i believed to be true


- © Lydia Pejovic 2022


Lydia Pejovic is a writer, lecturer, and current dual English MA/MFA student at Chapman University. She received her BA in English from the University of San Diego. She writes both fiction and poetry. Check her out at https://www.lydiapejovic.com/.


Thursday, October 20, 2022

New Poetry by Jason Beale










Common or Indian Myna

They're a favourite of suburban poets
lazily in need of some local colour,
even though they're an interloper, a pest,
and not as lovely as the noisy miner.

Cheeky little buggers in dark Zorro hoods
with the feral stealth of true survivors,
they’re hated for driving out native birds 
but in India a symbol of faithful lovers.

Every day I watch them on our lawn,
peck-pecking away at invisible prey,
bugs and beetles, a worm now and then.

They hang around the back door too,
staking out the dog's bowl, hoping to score, 
like Heckle and Jeckle meets Bill and Ben.

Common mynas live at breakneck speed,
always dodging magpies, cats and cars,
often found deceased on bitumen or asphalt,
sometimes hopping in and out of poets’ dreams.

- © Jason Beale 2022



Jason Beale is a writer who lives in the southeast suburbs of Melbourne. His poems have been published in Meniscus, Grieve Vol 10 and Poetry d’Amour 2022.

Monday, October 17, 2022

New Prose Poetry by Heather Sager










Snowflakes Falling

 With the look of winter, you emerge from the front door of a house. You are young, and your eyes sparkle with curiosity. I say you look of winter because of your black top hat, your black coat, and because your eyes tilt to the gray and white sky. You whistle as you walk onto the sidewalk along the curb. Other people hibernate in their homes. You are all alone. White snow blankets the ground everywhere, and patches of snow drift across the path you head onto, marching quickly. Bare, small trees hunker under pale fluff. The metal park-bench near the weeping willow glowers metallic black. Out in the evergreen-scented air, winter snow flakes fall as delicately patterned as spiral lace onto your shoulders, and also wetly blur your vision. You pull the neck of your coat up to warm yourself. Now you feel as cozy as the folks you imagine lounging indoors. Next the images of the movie you plan to make glimmer in your mind. You intend to make something magical, with a special effect or three—a film that will cause viewers to stop in their life’s tracks and say, “Oh My.” You want to craft a movie about rare humans who live on the moon. Who live in style. The snow reminds you of a painter’s canvas. The images of your film-dream are set in motion.
 You are out walking in winter, the snowflakes gently falling. 


- © Heather Sager 2022


Heather Sager lives in Illinois where she writes poetry and fiction. Her writing has recently appeared in Remington Review, Bluepepper, Poets' Espresso Review, Poetry Pacific, Flights, The Fabulist, Otoliths, Magma, and more journals and anthologies.

New Poetry by JD DeHart










If I Had Only One Pen

I would write your story large,
of living by the railroad tracks,

mother gone too young,
father hunched up in tradition,

and pain,

a back injury, coal dust spelling
your future with dried fingers.

A husband who would
crawl under trains. Sons who

would live most comfortably
among trees and beside springs,
listening to the voices of creeks,

wisdom spilling like water
like the pounds, even tons

of care you give.


- © JD DeHart 2022


JD DeHart is a writer and teacher. His most recent poetry collection, A Five-Year Journey, is available from Dreaming Big Publications.

Sunday, October 16, 2022

New Poetry by Abigail George










The Psychologist

Her kids are American. In pictures
they draw in kindergarten
they have spaghetti meatballs
for heads. Her life is Americana.
She speaks with an accent.
On the phone in clipped American
tones. Saying ‘yeah’ at the end
of her sentences. By now she
probably believes in thanksgiving,
turkey and reality television.
She does not read Bessie Head, 
Joyce Carol Oates, Lauren Beukes.
Andre Brink. I don’t think she’s
ever heard of Ingrid Jonker.
Perhaps my cousin did a poem of hers placed
in the curriculum in matric. That love affair
inspired me. I wanted to write like him.
Poems like Ingrid Jonker.
All the psychologist wants is to talk.
For me to talk about me. 
The sad, lyrical, beautiful diagnosis.
And that is the last thing I want.


- © Abigail George 2022


South African Abigail George has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize ("Wash Away My Sins"), and Best of the Net awards for her poetry and an essay. She is a blogger, lyricist, editor, filmmaker, playwright, poet, essayist, chapbook, novelist, novella, grant, and short story writer. She briefly studied film at NFTS (Newtown Film and Television School) in Johannesburg. She was educated in Port Elizabeth, and Swaziland. She is the Contributing Editor for African Writer, and an editor at Mwanaka Media and Publishing. She writes op-ed pieces for local newspapers, and has written columns for national travel magazine. Her latest books are "The Scholarship Girl: Life Writing", "Parks and Recreation", "Of Smoke Flesh and Bone: Poems Against Depression" (Mwanaka Media and Publishing), and "Anatomy of Melancholy" (Praxis), a chapbook which was released in 2020. Her latest book is Letter to Petya Dubarova released by Gazebo Books (Australia). Her publishers are Tendai Rinos Mwanaka, Xavier Hennekinne and Roxana Nastase.

New Poetry by Rob Schackne










The Swerve

“The messages are brief but they extend  
 in the solitude of their (our) nights.” 
             -  John Berger in Fellow Prisoners

Enter the bee-loud glade 
birds regain their bearings 
the world throbs awake 

the felled trees 
tantalised 
the ashes spoke 

will I sleep forever 
will I wake tomorrow 

coming up the edge 
the sun in our eyes 
what did we miss 

I write half a hazy dream 
a meadow of butterflies 
looking for the other half 

will I wake tomorrow 
will I sleep forever 


- © Rob Schackne 2022


Rob was born in New York. He lived in many countries until Australia finally took him in. In 2017 he returned to Oz after working for 15 years in China as a Foreign Expert EFL teacher. He lives in country Victoria where he enjoys the blue sky, sunshine, fresh air, and the birds. There were some extreme sports once; now he writes poems and takes photographs.


(N.B. The "bee-loud glade” is taken from W.B. Yeats’s ‘The Lake Isle of Innisfree’) 







Wednesday, October 12, 2022

New Poetry by Brooks Lindberg










Dostoyevsky's Dice

12 times the mousetrap snaps and
12 times I discover it's empty.

Hemingway had bulls.
Bukowski, race horses.
Nabokov, butterflies.
Schopenhauer, poodles.

And me, I've got mice
whose work with peanut butter
provides perpetual awe and despair.


- © Brooks Lindberg 2022


Brooks Lindberg is a tax attorney recently moved to the Pacific Northwest. His poems often appear in The Blotter Magazine. Others appear in Tigershark Magazine, Squawk Back, Wild Violet, and elsewhere. You can find links to his works at brookslindberg.com.

Tuesday, October 11, 2022

New Poetry by Nick Boyer


 







Application

Yes,
I am an American citizen.
Yes,
I have a bachelor’s degree.
Yes,
I am not brave enough to starve. 

Yes,
I will find some time to enjoy my sustainable wealth.
Yes,
I saw what my parents did and what my grandparents did.
Yes,
you can take my last escape; I’ll piss in the cup.

No,
I do not think I am above work -
I think everyone is. I am no politician.
I am neither Hitler nor Buddha. I am
broken and in a cast(e). I think and 
stutter and trip over my guts and swollen
liver. I have acne on my thighs and everyone knows.

No,
retirement is not enough of an incentive,
neither is currency. I want time. Is that 
selfish? What language is that on the wall?

No,
I won’t tell the truth. Who is asking? It 
cannot be god. As a child, I was yelled at
by a priest during the middle of a service.
I was banging on the side of the pew with
my plastic hammer. 
I didn’t think anything of it.


- © Nick Boyer 2022


Nick Boyer is an emerging poet writing in Upstate New York. He recently self-published his debut novel, Steady Progress Home, and his poetry has been published in Taj Mahal Review. More of his writing can be found on the web at poetryforthegrave.com or @poetryforthegrave on Instagram.





Monday, October 10, 2022

New Poetry by John Tustin










Number the Stars
 
We are so arrogant as to dismiss the gods,
Making it so easy for the gods
To dismiss us.

We are so arrogant as to try to quantify love.
We are so arrogant with our bows, trying to shoot love from the sky.

We are so arrogant as to try to build a golden trellis
Adorned with blood red roses
That rises up toward our visions of heaven in the clouds.

The gods have no need for gold or blood red roses.
They pluck us as we climb and down we tumble.

We are so arrogant as to try to number the stars
When there are so many more stars
Than the days we have remaining
And are too afraid to number.

The stars remain in their frozen dignity.
We dissolve day-by-day in our fragile and debased less and less love.
We are so arrogant as to dream
More than we sleep,
Want more than we need,
Take more than we try.


- © John Tustin 2022


John Tustin’s poetry has appeared in many disparate literary journals since 2009. fritzware.com/johntustinpoetry contains links to his published poetry online.

 

Sunday, October 09, 2022

New Poetry by Henry Stimpson










Elsewhere

Under another sun, my twin in teal trunks
daydreams in an identical blue canvas
beach chair. He too slurps lemonade, smells

his warm salty skin and hears the waves
crashing. Now he and I get up and charge
across the hot white sand into the bracing surf.

Later, we wonder: is there a strange near-twin
on a blue beach in an almost-Rhode Island
writing subtler poems in greenish English?


- © Henry Stimpson 2022


Henry Stimpson’s poems have appeared in Poet Lore, Lighten Up Online, Rolling Stone, Muddy River Poetry Review, Mad River Review, Aethlon, The MacGuffin, The Aurorean, Common Ground Review, Asses of Parnassus, Bluepepper, The Boston Phoenix, Boston University Today, Snakeskinpoetry, Atlanta Review, California Quarterly and On the Seawall.  He also writes essays, humor and articles, lives in Massachusetts and hopes to see a Boston Celtics championship in 2023. 

New Poetry by Jean Bohuslav










priorities

it was an artistic eye favouring an assorted
coloured flock to gaze upon
instead of gallant black headed suffolk
various fleeces being more coveted
for spinning than lamb on plates

a merino ram tied to a nearby
post won her heart as she sold ducklings
at the market
two years growth of fine jet-black wool and
huge curled horns to secure behind the
valiant’s front seat was a joyful trial

the following year he was replaced by
a trojan lincoln minus head gear
idi amin’s streaming silver locks
blinded him almost totally when charging
onlookers being terrified of his battle tactics
more than the actual butt of a broad
nuggety head

the favourite
a chocolate romney sire
raced billy carts downhill to
ropes dangling from redgums
saving youngster’s rumps
then chased them uphill till they climbed
stacked fallen branches
a ready bonfire
where outsmarting him was rejoiced

he appeared docile
until unexpecting youngsters flew over
ringlock fencing
losing shoes and pride
his antics were generally acceptable
like many humans

those paddocks taught compromise
she could have most things
but had to take what came with them


- © Jean Bohuslav 2022
  

Jean Bohuslav enjoys being part of a poetry group in Torquay Victoria.  She shares her work online and has a chapbook published.  Jean’s other interests are mindfulness philosophy and painting.

 

 

 

Tuesday, October 04, 2022

New Poetry by Malak Nicholas H.










son, are you okay?

You had blood in your hair,
when I met you, you had
broken teeth and your skin
was scorn, full of scars and
small lesions, you spat out
blood and you greeted me,
as if nothing was going on,
as if it didn’t look like you
were close to giving up the
ghost, close to dropping dead.


- © Malak Nicholas H. 2022


Malak Nicholas H. is a writer currently in Europe. He’s a teenager, a middle eastern queer person, but also so much more. And first of all, he is a human who writes about being out of the gender binary & the mental issues he’s been through.

Monday, October 03, 2022

New Poetry by Fotoula Reynolds










September-gold

Sometimes life feels like
The tiny artful twists of a bonsai
Choreographing me to the places
I am meant to be

With full authority
Rising, climbing the air
Like the sunflower that I am
Mysterious and becoming
Dancing into destiny

Feeling safe and hidden
Behind a weeping willow’s
Curtain-like branches, I’m moved
To beyond all that I know

Treading lightly on seeds
That are September-gold
I navigate a spider web thread
And see the pattern within
Emotion-weave into my soul

On a path of unendingness
My heart travels a landscape
Through butterfly-eyes
I breathe a clean language

On the rotating weather wheel
I am further than middle age
I no longer follow a map and
I trust the season of change


- © Fotoula Reynolds 2022


Fotoula Reynolds is a writer of poetry, born in Australia of Greek heritage. She convenes a poetry group in her local community and regularly attends and participates in spoken word events in and around the city of Melbourne. She is the author of three poetry collections with her fourth due for release late October 2022 titled: Kairos. Fotoula is published widely in journals, reviews, anthologies and magazines and has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize. Also by Fotoula Reynolds: The sanctuary of my garden (2018), Silhouettes (2019), Along the Macadam Road (2020)